KSDN-FM

KSDN-FM (94.1 FM, "The Rock 94.1 FM") is a radio station licensed to serve Aberdeen, South Dakota.[1] The station is owned by Prairie Winds Broadcasting, Inc. It airs a mainstream rock music format.[2]

KSDN-FM
CityAberdeen, South Dakota
Broadcast areaAberdeen, South Dakota
Frequency94.1 MHz (HD Radio)
Branding94.1 The Rock
SloganAberdeen's Rock Station
Programming
FormatFM/HD1: Mainstream rock
HD2: Classic country "Pure Country 107.1"
Ownership
OwnerHub City Radio
(Prairie Winds Broadcasting, Inc.)
Sister stationsKBFO, KGIM, KGIM-FM, KNBZ, KSDN
History
First air dateSeptember 14, 1978
Technical information
Facility ID25118
ClassC1
ERP59,000 watts
HAAT134 meters (440 feet)
Transmitter coordinates45°25′26″N 98°31′1″W
Translator(s)107.1 K296FW (Aberdeen, relays HD2)
Links
WebcastListen Live
WebsiteKSDN-FM Online
KSDN-HD2 Online

The station was assigned the KSDN-FM call letters by the Federal Communications Commission on September 14, 1978.[3]

Notable on-air personalities include Rusty Rokit (6 am – 10 am), Brent Nathaniel (10 am – 2 pm), Doc Sebastian (2 pm – 7 pm) and Les Cummings (7 pm – midnight). Plus syndicated Dee Snider's House Of Hair & Hard Drive.

94.1 The Rock is the radio home of the Northern State University Wolves.

Ownership, history and programming

In 1997, Roberts Radio of Pleasantville, New York, acquired KSDN and KSDN-FM then, in a separate transaction, acquired KKAA, KKAA-FM, and KQAA-FM. KSDN-FM's studio were moved from the transmitter site on south highway 281 to the KKAA-AM transmitter site 2 miles south of Aberdeen, South Dakota. The station was rebranded from "Rock 94" to its original slogan "94.1 The Rock" and ABC Radio's Classic Rock Experience 24-hour satellite format was added.[4]

In June 2000, Clear Channel purchased Roberts Radio entire assets including the 5 Aberdeen station in a deal valued at a reported $65.9 million. Aberdeen radio stations KKAA (1560 AM), KQAA (94.9 FM), KSDN (930 AM), KSDN (94.1 FM) and KBFO (106.7 FM) were part of that deal. KSDN-FM retained its Classic Rock format.[5]

Late 2004, Aberdeen Radio Ranch’s Rob & Todd Ingstad of Valley City, ND signed an agreement to acquire five Clear Channel-Aberdeen, SD stations: KKAA-AM, KSDN-AM/FM, KBFO-FM, KQAA-FM. In separate transactions, Aberdeen Radio Ranch agreed to convey the assets of three of its stations to other companies, leaving the Ingstads with six area stations KGIM-AM/FM, KBFO-FM, KSDN-AM/FM & KNBZ-FM. Sacramento-based Education Media Foundation picked up KQAA-FM. Oakland-based Family Stations acquired KKAA-AM and KQKD-AM. The studios were relocated from the KKAA-AM transmitter site 2 miles south of Aberdeen to the remodeled original studio location which housed the KSDN-AM/FM transmitter on south highway 281. ABC Radio's Classic Rock Experience was dropped in favor of local programing. KSDN-FM's format also changed from Classic rock to Mainstream Rock.

In May 2006, Armada Media Corporation reached an agreement to acquire KBFO, KGIM, KGIM-FM, KNBZ, KSDN, and KSDN-FM from Aberdeen Radio Ranch for a reported $9.25 million. KSDN-FM maintained its Mainstream Rock format.[6]

On November 1, 2013, Prairie Winds Broadcasting, Inc. reached an agreement to acquire KBFO, KGIM, KGIM-FM, KNBZ, KSDN, and KSDN-FM from Armada Media for $5.3 million.[7]

gollark: The crate I'm using for this is quite nice and it seems to support this, great.
gollark: Huh. They actually have a fairly complex frame format.
gollark: I am *checking*.
gollark: Hmm, that *does* sound like something it might have.
gollark: I was also thinking of adding checksums, but that MAY be pointless.

References

  1. Bahr, Jeff (2006-01-26). "Changes coming to Aberdeen radio dial: More local shows, ESPN added; less political gabbers". Aberdeen American News.
  2. "Station Information Profile". Arbitron. Archived from the original on 2010-03-01.
  3. "Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database.
  4. Kirschenmann, Jay (1997-06-12). "Changes Ahead for Aberdeen, S.D., Radio Stations". Aberdeen American News.
  5. "Texas Company Continues to Acquire Radio Stations". Aberdeen American News. 2000-07-07.
  6. Bahr, Jeff (2006-05-13). "$9.25 million paid for six Aberdeen radio stations". Aberdeen American News.
  7. FCC https://licensing.fcc.gov/cdbs/CDBS_Attachment/getattachment.jsp?appn=101576266&qnum=5040&copynum=1&exhcnum=1. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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